Is It Time To Change Our Voting System?
Is It Time To Change Our Voting System?
By Dr Muriel Newman of the New Zealand Centre for Political Research,
NZCPR
October 10th 1996 was New Zealand's first MMP election. Eleven years on, MMP has profoundly changed the face of New Zealand politics.
To mark the anniversary of MMP, the NZCPR is delighted to publish - for the very first time - a speech written by Don Brash a year ago when he was Leader of the Opposition. The speech 'We Deserve Another Referendum on MMP' was never delivered because, as Don explains, "some of my colleagues thought that it was a 'distraction' from the issues we were then focussed on".
Don reflects the views of a good many New Zealanders when he says:
"While MMP has
got some advantages, it leads to disproportionate influence
for very small parties, as a consequence leads to weak and
'compromising' government, requires more MPs than most New
Zealanders see as desirable, and greatly strengthens the
hand of party bosses at the expense of voters". (To read
Don's speech click There is no doubt about the fact that MMP has delivered
excessive power into the hands of minor parties. In a recent
speech on "MMP and Public Policy" journalist and author
Graeme Hunt put it this way: "The anti-smacking law is the
ultimate example of MMP influencing public policy. Before
the Bradford bill appeared, there was no public policy on
smacking and the Prime Minister was on record as saying she
opposed criminalizing parents who resorted to the occasional
smack of a wayward child. But with the problems surrounding
her Mangere MP, Phillip Field, she had no choice but to
reach an accommodation with the Greens over a bill that was
neither loved nor wanted. It was MMP at its most ugly". (To
read Graeme's speech click
The reality is that under
MMP, the voters' democratic right to choose their MPs has
been compromised. At the present time, 52 MPs in our
Parliament of 121 have been chosen by party bosses. Worse,
some of the MPs who did not have the confidence of voters in
their electorates were returned to Parliament as Party
appointees, carrying on as list MPs as if nothing had
changed. The system of checks and balances that normally
operate in a democracy - where candidates have to satisfy
the majority of voters in order to successfully represent
them in Parliament - is now missing. That means that
candidates with views that are so extreme that they are
unacceptable to the wider community can now be Members of
the New Zealand Parliament through their party list
selection process. Under MMP, governments are no longer
formed as a result of voter opinion, but after negotiations
between party bosses. It is therefore not surprising that
small parties wield a disproportionate amount of influence.
Labour's radical move towards environmental sustainability
is only possible because of the more extreme ideological
views being promoted by their Green Party partner. These
will not only lead to a massive escalation in consumer costs
associated with the government's new energy strategy, but
will significantly increase household rubbish charges and
water rates as a starter. These are all changes that the
electorate would more than likely reject, if asked. MMP
was promoted on the basis that it would improve
Parliamentary representation. With more women, a larger
number of MPs who are not careers politicians, and an
increase in ethnic representation, it has achieved that
objective. At the present time there are 21 Maori Members
of Parliament. Seven of those represent the race-based Maori
seats, whose principle role appears to be to win greater
state privileges for Maori. Since these privileges come at
the expense of the rest of the population, the Maori seats
are an anachronism, which the Royal Commission on Electoral
Reform recommended should be abolished. Ironically, their
continuance appears guaranteed because of MMP, with all
Parliamentary Parties now supporting their retention. As a
result, the extremist Maori Party, which holds four of those
Maori seats, looks set to become the future "kingmaker" of
the New Zealand Parliament. The real problem with MMP is
that coalition politics requires every item of business to
be negotiated through these minority niche support parties
under a "quid pro quo" process: "if you support this, then
we will give you that". As a result, under MMP New Zealand
is being driven by extreme agendas with little likelihood
that critical but 'unpopular' issues will ever be addresses
by any government in the foreseeable future. This means
that the growing underclass - spawned by our dysfunctional
welfare system - which is responsible for the lion's share
of New Zealand's social problems, is unlikely to ever be
reformed under MMP. Instead, the 'solution' will undoubtedly
be more politically palatable 'feel-good' public service
advertising campaigns. Unless there is a real commitment to
reform, child abuse and neglect will continue to increase,
violence and crime will continue to escalate, and more girls
and women will continue to become career beneficiaries by
having children they do not want and cannot care for. The
politics of compromise, which MMP has become, will ensure
that no party has the courage to fix this dysfunctional
system in desperate need of change. In his speech, Don
Brash made the comment that "only one voter in six voted for
MMP under any real conviction that it would provide a better
system". In other words, MMP became our system of government
not because it was deemed to deliver a higher standard of
government, but because voters were tired of the childish
antics of their MPs and wanted to give them a shake-up. This
added to a series of 'gaffes' that gave us MMP. The first
of those gaffes can be traced back to a televised leaders'
debate in the 1987 election campaign, when David Lange
promised that if Labour was re-elected he would hold a
binding referendum on MMP. At the time, while there was a
strong lobby of third party representatives promoting MMP,
neither he nor most of his Labour colleagues, were
supporters. Instead of holding the promised referendum,
Lange established a Select Committee inquiry. The committee
recommended that First Past the Post be retained but a
referendum be held to see whether there was public support
for increasing the size of parliament using the
Supplementary Member system. The Supplementary Member system
operates in a number of countries including Japan, Taiwan
and South Korea. The second gaffe on the road to MMP was
committed by Jim Bolger during the 1990 election campaign,
when, in seeking to embarrass Labour for failing to deliver
on its referendum pledge, he rashly promised to hold a
binding referendum on the electoral system if elected.
Again, neither he nor his party supported MMP. The binding
referendum on MMP was held on 6 November 1993 with 53.9
percent of people voting in favour and 46.1 percent against.
Commentators say that if the election had been held a week
earlier, First Past the Post would have been retained.
When the 1993 Electoral Act to introduce MMP was drafted,
a clause was inserted to allow a Select Committee to review
the system after two MMP elections and to determine whether
there should be a another referendum on electoral reform.
Many New Zealanders understood this to mean that another
referendum would be held, so that if they voted for MMP and
it didn't work out, they could get rid of it. The Select
Committee set up in 2000 to review MMP - as was required by
the Act - couldn't reach a decision on whether another
referendum was needed. As a result, the Government
concluded: "Changing any major constitutional arrangements
would require a higher level of consensus from the public
than currently appears to exist. In the absence of that high
degree of consensus, the Government is of the view that it
would not be appropriate to recommend any significant
amendments at this time". Section 264 of the 1993
Electoral Act stated that if there was to be a further
referendum on changes to the electoral system that, "the
nature of the proposals to be put to voters" be outlined.
The difficulty we have at the present time is that while
many people are unhappy with the way MMP is working out,
there is no consensus on a viable alternative. In his
speech, Don Brash provides some leadership: "My personal
preference would be to adopt the Supplementary Member system
with a total Parliament of 100 members. There could be 75
electorate MPs, thus enabling a small reduction in the size
of current electorates. And 25 list MPs. As now, voters
would have two votes - one for their electorate candidate
and one for their preferred party. But whereas at present
the party vote determines the overall composition of
Parliament, under the SM system the party vote would
determine only the composition of the list seats. A system
of this kind would enable minority voices to be heard
without giving small parties disproportionate influence,
would enable a reduction in the total size of Parliament,
would provide a route for people to enter Parliament without
spending a lifetime working through the party hierarchy, and
would provide a way of ensuring reasonable diversity in the
overall composition of Parliament. To the extent that a
higher proportion of the total Members of Parliament would
be elected in electorates, SM would also increase the power
of voters and reduce that of party bosses". The public
poll this week asks whether there is support for a campaign
to replace MMP with the Supplementary Member system as
proposed by Don Brash. To vote go to
http://www.nzcpr.com ENDS